The Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan is a fantasy- adventure novel that is based on Greek mythology. It's the second novel in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series. Percy Jackson has been having nightmares about his satry friend Grover Underwood. The first dream involving Grover running from an unknown force and hiding in wedding shop. At school a group of Laestrygoians attack Percy and his classmates in a game of dodgeball, but is saved by one of his friends Tyson and Annabeth Chase, one of his friends from camp. Annabeth takes Percy and Tyson to Camp Half Blood, the only safe place for demigods, which are kids who are children of humans and gods. All three of them take the …show more content…
During a chariot race, the campers are attacked by Stymphalian Birds, Tantalus, who was replacing Chiron at the time, sends Clarisse La Rue on a quest to go find the fleece. Percy, Annabeth, and Tyson run away from camp to go and find the fleece themselves. Hermes, the god of jacks, thieves, messages, etc., gives them gifts to help them on their quest. Percy asks his dad, Poseidon, to help them get to a cruise ship on the horizon. Three Hippocampi appear from the water and carries the three of them to the cruise ship named the Princess Andromeda. Once aboard the ship, they discover that the ship seems to be deserted, but find fully stocked cabins to sleep in. In the morning they wake up to find the ship full of tourists, but all of the tourists seem kind of off, as if they were in some sort of a trance. Then they discover that the ship is infested with monsters as well. The three are captured by Luke Castellan, who is the owner of the ship. Percy and his friends discover that Luke is transporting the ship with monsters and the remains of the Titan Kronos in a golden sarcophagus. Luke was going to also find the fleece and bring back Kronos to …show more content…
CC has one of her assistants give Annabeth a tour of the resort while she stayed with Percy giving him a full makeover. CC shows Percy the best version of himself in a magical mirror, and tells him to drink a magical fluid that will transform him into his true self. However, when he drinks it, he is turned into a Guinea pig. CC then puts him in a cage with other Guinea pigs. When Annabeth returns from her tour of the resort, she discovers the CC is really the sorcerers Circe, who turns men into Guinea pigs and puts them in a cage. Circe asks Annabeth to join her, and train to be a powerful sorceress like her. Annabeth tells Circe if she could have a moment alone saying goodbye to Percy. Annabeth uses Hermes's anti-magic vitamins to protect herself from Circe's Magic and feeds the rest to the Guinea pigs in the cage. The vitamins turns Percy back to normal and the others as well. The other Guinea pigs turned out to be the crew of Blackbeard, son of Ares, who go and destroy the resort. Percy and Annabeth escape from the island on Blackbeard's ship Queen Anne's Revenge. Both of them manage to make it to Polyphemus's island where they're reunited with Clarisse and Tyson who
Percy stranded and lost, amnesiac, and running from the gorgons, finds Camp Jupiter, the roman camp for demigods. He makes friends with Frank and Hazel. Together, they win Capture the Flag for fifth Cohort. Mars then claims Frank as his son and issues a quest to save Thanatos, the greek god of death, from LAceonus, a giant born to oppose Pluto, and issues Frank as the quest leader.
Athena disguises him as an old beggar and he meets up with his son, Telemachus. They form a plan to beat the suitors and then Odysseus goes to meet them. Finally, it is decided that whoever can use Odysseus’s bow to shoot an arrow through twelve axes. Odysseus, unsurprisingly, wins and starts fighting the suitors. He kills them all and reveals himself to Penelope. To make sure it’s him, she asks him to move their bed. Knowing it can’t be moved, he tells her that part of the headboard is a tree. Penelope and Odysseus are reunited and they live the rest of their lives together.
When one of the Socs tries to drown Pony, he goes unconscious and when he wakes up, he sees that Johnny has killed one of the Socs. The two boys decide to go to their friend Dally; he gives them money and directions to a church in the country. There they hide out for a long week, and after it Dally comes to find them. After eating, they return to the church and see that it has caught fire. A group of children are stuck in the burning building.
The beginning of the myth of Cronus is about the father Uranus and the mother Gaea had children and the father did not like how one of them look so the other brothers took down their father Uranus .The middle of the myth is about is that Cronus, one of the children got married and he was afraid that his child would rise up against so he swallowed every one of them.At the end of the myth, Zeus one of his children did not get swallowed , he had a plan to get his siblings back and he did and he took down his father just like the prophet said would happen. In the myth had a prophecy that would someday happen and they both tried to not make it come true, but it still happened and they were both wrong trying to skip the prophet Cronus and his Titan brothers to rise up against their father and save their other brothers Cronus did
After the encounter with Polyphemus, the squadron end up in the realm of Aeolus, the master of winds. Aeolus warmly welcomes Odysseus and his crew and showers them with gifts, among these gifts there is a sack containing the winds from each direction. Odysseus then frees the West Wind to speed them home. Nearing the coast of Ithaca, the crew became curious of the what the sack contained so “they loosed the sack and all the winds burst out” and sent the ship back towards Aeolus’ island(10.52). Odysseus’ crew succumbs to temptation and opens the sack unleashing the other winds. They are then blown away from Ithaca and back to Aeolus. Now instead of the journey ending, they need to find some other way home because Aeolus believes the gods cursed the crew and would not offer any more aid. The crew then rows to Circe’s island where “she enticed” them to stay “and there [they] sat at ease, / day in, day out, till a year had run its course” (10.515-16). The crew do not resist the temptation and put off their journey home. They end up spending a whole year at Circe’s island making no progress on their journey. Once they finally left Circe’s island they sailed towards Ithaca but encountered fierce winds that forced Odysseus and his crew to make landfall on Thrinacia. Here the cattle and sheep of the Sungod Helios resided. Odysseus then warns his crew to not harm the cattle and sheep, but the crew, running out of provisions, “drove off the Sun God’s finest cattle” and slaughtered them (12.380). Even though Odysseus warns the crew to not harm the cattle, the crew fails to resist the temptation and slaughtered the cattle nonetheless. Helios, enraged that his cattle were killed, prompts Zeus to punish the crew. Zeus agrees, destroys Odysseus’ ship, and kills the crew. Odysseus is spared by Zeus because he did not harm the cattle. This leaves Odysseus
This shows how important it was for the ancient Greeks to treat their guests affectionately. From there on, his journey is given hope when he visits Nestor who gives him insight on the possibility of his father to be alive. While Telemachus is on a mission to find his father, Odysseus is encountering some of his own obstacles. His crew and him are stranded on the land of the Cyclops.
Before letting him leave the island, Circe tells Odysseus that he must face Scylla, a sea monster, and Charybdis, a whirlpool. Circe says, “Better by far to lose six men and keep you ship” (274). Odysseus is told beforehand that no ship could pass unscathed, but he chooses to not to tell his crew. He knowingly sacrifices his crewmembers’ lives and has no qualms about it, which shows his inner selfishness. He makes sure to protect his own life, but he sees his crew as disposable. Homer characterizes Odysseus this way in order to convey his views about humanity: humans are instinctively selfish. Odysseus also carelessley kills his remaining crew when he taunts the Cyclops. After hearing Odysseus’s name, Polyphemus prays to Poseidon and asks that Odysseus “never reaches home” but if he is destined to return, make sure he returns “a broken man—all shipmates lost, alone in a strangers ship” (228). If Odysseus had never told Polyphemus his name, he and his crew might have made it home more quickly and safely. Instead, his hubris causes an inescapable curse. Odysseus cannot bear the thought of forfeiting his fame, which leads to even more hardship on his quest to return home. Homer uses Odysseus to demonstrate the danger of egotistical
Odysseus loose his ship and men at see. Next he must deal with the Charybdis and Scylla.
Percy Jackson and the Olympians: the Lightning Thief the movie is about a young boy who has just discovered that he is a demi-god Percy Jackson. His father is Poseidon and his mother has been keeping it from him for many years. There is a lightning bolt that is stolen from Zeus on Mt. Olympus and Zeus believes that Percy has stolen it and demands its return by the summer solstice. In the mean time Percy gets attacked by multiple magical and mythological beings. There is a camp that demi-gods are safe from these things which is where Percy’s mother and his protector, Grover, take him to. This is where Percy’s journey begins. After a few days of being at the camp he realizes what he has to do. His mother was taken by Hades to the underworld and Percy has to save her all while trying to prove to Zeus that he did not steal the Lighting bolt.
His crew makes many mistakes as they traverse across the sea in their return to Ithaca. As they lay stranded and trapped upon the island of Helios, Eurylochos said. “All deaths are hateful to miserable mortals, but the most pitiable death of all is to starve” (144). Despite the warning from Odysseus that they will all be doomed should they kill any of the sacred cows upon the island, they fear the death without remembrance and honor much more so then they fear the potential wrath of the gods that Odysseus has spoken of. This recklessness stands as their final temptation the crew faced as it resulted in each of its members’ death but it was far from their only opportunity in which they
When Odysseus is exploring the island alone, notices that there is a house on a hill. Odysseus divides his men in half, and it is Eurylochus’ group that goes to the house. All of Eurylochus’ company except Eurylochus himself enters the house, where they are given food and wine by Circe. The meal, however, is drugged, and the sailors are turned into pigs. Eurylochus hurries back to the ship, telling Odysseus that the other men have disappeared.
This man cares more about the wants and needs of the people around him then his own. Percy is brave in the toughest of situations, and stands up for what is right. Percy Jackson has even saved the world twice, by leading armies he organised on his own.
Rick Riordan’s ‘Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief’ focuses on Greek mythology and interprets this into a children’s story. Throughout the story, there are many references and adaptations to mythological tales, and each one is portrayed in a different way. Riordan writes this story as though Hercules, Zeus and Poseidon were still around today, and this would be the effect they would have on people in this day and age.
...the epic. She simply disguises as a young boy and then confesses her identity because her intentions were fulfilled. This will then help him move along in his plan as he knows Athene will be assisting him to retrieve his home from the grasp of the suitors.
The fact that Percy Jackson has friends is incredible. It’s an unshakable fact that any friend of his within a ten mile radius will be in a life or death situation with him by dinner, and they aren’t always so lucky as him. But that’s getting ahead of ourselves. Over the course of the five-part contemporary young adult series Percy Jackson & The Olympians, titular character Percy Jackson must embrace his Greek God parentage and save Olympus with the help of his fellow demigods. The aim of this paper is to discuss his Hero’s Journey throughout the series, provide an in depth character analysis, and draw parallels between Percy and the three classic Greek heroes of mythology: Perseus, Theseus, and Hercules.